Authentic and Inauthentic Places in Tourism From Heritage Sites to Theme Parks Contemporary Geographies of Leisure, Tourism and Mobility Series
Auteurs : Lovell Jane, Bull Chris
With the rise of post-truth and fake news, a thorough examination of authenticity has never been so relevant. This book explores the geography of authenticity, investigating a wide variety of places used by tourists. Not only does it assess what might be described as the more traditional objects for examination ? places such as the city, the countryside and the coast ? it also includes chapters on art and place, hipster places, gentrification, heritage sites, film locations, photographed places and eventful places.
Using a wide-angled lens on places reveals linkages and possibilities, enabling the book to skate across the surface of the geography of authenticity, locating the magically real heritage site, the poignant replica, the authenticated theme park, the unmasked carnival. In focusing on authentic and inauthentic places, this text provides a useful contribution to the understanding of how places are changing, how they are perceived, and how authenticity is embodied and performed within them. Authentic and Inauthentic Places in Tourism is an insightful study and an essential read for those involved in the study of geography, tourism, urban studies, culture and heritage.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Places and Authenticity, Chapter 2 Historic Cities: From Museumification to the Origin of the Spaces, Chapter 3 The restoration and Reproduction of Historic Sites: From the Ship of Theseus to mechanistic authentication, Chapter 4 Cities as stage sets: From gentrification and festival market places to hipster places, Chapter 5 Site-specific art: From magical realism and creative placemaking to simulacra, Chapter 6 The Seaside Resort: From piers and promenades to nostalgic authenticity, Chapter 7 The Rural Idyll: From cultural countryside to constructed authenticity, Chapter 8 Wilderness Regions: From national parks to existential authenticity, Chapter 9 Squaring the circle of authenticity in film and photography: From mass-reproduction to the punctum, Chapter 10 Events and places: From giant spectaculars and carnival masks to hyperreality, Chapter 11 Variations on a theme: the imagineering of fast authenticity from theme parks and museums to shopping malls
Jane Lovell is aSenior Lecturer at Canterbury Christ Church University. Jane’s PhD thesis examined staged authenticity in historic cities. She is Chair of Canterbury Heritage Partnership, co-Director of COaST Network – examining culture in Kent’s seaside resorts – and Chair of the Lighting Collective – bringing together academics and practitioners in the field of light shows.
Chris Bull is the former Head of the Department of Sport Science, Tourism and Leisure, Canterbury Christ Church University. He is the co-author of several texts: The Geography of Rural Resources (1984); An Introduction to Leisure Studies (2003); and Sports Tourism: Participants, Policy and Providers (2004 and 2009).
Date de parution : 07-2019
15.6x23.4 cm
Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 14 jours).
Prix indicatif 50,12 €
Ajouter au panierDate de parution : 08-2017
15.6x23.4 cm
Thèmes d’Authentic and Inauthentic Places in Tourism :
Mots-clés :
Tourist Historic City; Chris Bull; Wicker Park; authenticity and tourism; Van Der Duim; events and places; Emergent Authenticity; geographies of authenticity; Creative Placemaking; hyperreality; World Heritage Site Designation; identity and tourism; Hot Authentication; museums; Bird's Eye; place and culture; Canterbury City Council; rural idyll; Gentrified Places; seaside resort; Piazza Della Signoria; simulacra; Hyperreal Simulacra; site-specific art; Vice Versa; theme parks; Mechanistic Authentication; wilderness; Festival Market Places; Small Town USA; HMS Victory; Site Specific Art; Pop Stars; UK Identity; Rannoch Moor; China Town; Heritage Gaze; Great British Bake; British Seaside Resorts